[spectre] (fwd) Arts Catalyst Call for Submissions: Eye of the Storm
conference
Andreas Broeckmann
ab at mikro.in-berlin.de
Thu Mar 5 09:03:31 CET 2009
From: "The Arts Catalyst" <emailer at artscatalyst.org>
Subject: Call for Submissions: Eye of the Storm
Date: Wed, 04 Mar 2009 13:56:25 -0600
An Arts Catalyst / Tate Britain Conference
Eye of the Storm
An interdisciplinary conference on scientific controversy
19 / 20 June 2009
Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1, UK
http://www.artscatalyst.org/projects/global/eyeofthestorm.html
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
The Arts Catalyst and Tate Britain announce an international call for
artists, scientists, social scientists, theorists, policy-makers and
other disciplines, to present in Eye of the Storm, a conference
exploring scientific controversy from an interdisciplinary
perspective.
Eye of the Storm aims to explore a range of controversies, from
esoteric arguments between physicists over the structure of the
universe, to disputes about the causes of species decline and climate
change, and highly charged public controversies around the use of
stem cells and the distribution of genetically modified organisms.
When heated debates around the challenge of climate change have shown
how abstruse uncertainties within a scientific community can be
amplified and distorted to challenge the whole notion of human-caused
greenhouse warming, Eye of the Storm sets out to examine the
relationship between scientific uncertainty and public controversies
around science.
We invite abstracts for papers and proposals for artists'
presentations and talks for Eye of the Storm that consider questions
such as the following: When the whole culture and ethic of science is
based on disagreement and alternative explanations, how does this
essential scientific uncertainty work in the quest for knowledge? How
do scientific disputes affect political decision-making and society's
relationship with science? As scientific and technological
developments produce their own controversies, such as those around GM
crops, what are the current critical controversies in and around
science and technology? What alternative societal and cultural
perspectives and contributions do artists and social scientists bring
to this area? When the influential science sociologist Bruno Latour
has worried that social science - in questioning the 'reality' that
science examines - may have contributed to political abuses of
science: what is the relationship between scholarship, science and
politics?
Confirmed keynote speakers are Sheila Jasanoff, Pforzheimer Professor
of Science and Technology Studies at Harvard University, and Roger
Malina, astrophysicist, Director of Research at CNRS (National Center
for Scientific Research), former Director at the Laboratoire
d'Astrophysique de Marseille.
Submissions
Please send 200-word abstracts for papers and presentations (20
minutes maximum) to
<mailto:conference at artscatalyst.org?subject=Eye%20of%20the%20Storm%20Submission>conference at artscatalyst.org.
Artists may attach images (2MB maximum).
Deadline: 31 March 2009
Submission categories include: talks/papers, artists' presentations,
demonstrations.
Selection Committee
Michael Bravo, Lecturer, Scott Polar Research Institute, University
of Cambridge
Bernadette Buckley, Programme Convenor, MA Art & Politics,
Goldsmiths, University of London
Sian Ede, Director of Arts, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
Madeleine Keep, Education Department, Tate Britain
Rob La Frenais, Curator, The Arts Catalyst
Roger Malina, Chairman Emeritus, Leonardo, Director of Research, CNRS
Chair: Nicola Triscott, Director, The Arts Catalyst
Organisers
Eye of the Storm is organised by The Arts Catalyst and Tate Britain
in association with Leonardo/OLATS.
The Arts Catalyst
The Arts Catalyst is a UK-based arts organisation, commissioning new
artist's work that experimentally and critically engages with science
and is presented in a range of venues: art galleries, museums and
other public spaces. Alongside the commissions programme The Arts
Catalyst organises symposia and critical debates, artists residencies
and participatory and schools projects.
The Arts Catalyst has commissioned more than 70 artists' projects in
its 15 year existence, presented to a wide public in partnership with
venues including the Natural History Museum, Imperial College, the
Barbican Centre, the Roundhouse, the ICA, and P3 in London, Tramway
in Glasgow, Stills Gallery in Edinburgh, the John Hansard Gallery
Southampton, Cornerhouse in Manchester, and Gallery Oldham.
Tate Britain
Tate Britain is the national gallery of British art from 1500 to the
present day. As such, it is the most comprehensive collection of its
kind in the world. It houses a substantial collection of the work of
J.M.W. Turner. More recent artists include David Hockney, Peter Blake
and Francis Bacon. Tate Britain is part of the Tate gallery network
in Britain, with Tate Modern, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives.
Tate Britain symposia bring together experts and scholars to present
new research or to discuss aspects of a particular exhibition or
wider issues around visual culture. Symposia, sometimes with partner
institutions, are a focus for new scholarship and debate within
visual culture and its political or social impacts.
Leonardo/OLATS
Leonardo/OLATS serves the international arts community by promoting
and documenting work at the intersection of the arts, sciences, and
technology, and by encouraging collaboration between artists,
scientists, and technologists. Activities of the Leonardo network
include publication of the print journals Leonardo; the Leonardo
Music Journal; the Leonardo Book Series (all published by the MIT
Press); and several electronic publications.
The Arts Catalyst commissions art that experimentally and critically
engages with science. We bring together people across the art/science
divide and beyond to explore science in its wider social, political
and cultural contexts. We produce provocative, playful, risk-taking
projects to spark dynamic conversations about our changing world.
The Arts Catalyst :: Toynbee Studios :: 28 Commercial Street ::
London E1 6LS UK
email: <mailto:admin at artscatalyst.org>admin at artscatalyst.org ::
phone: +44 (0)20 7375 3690
url: http://www.artscatalyst.org
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